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There are a lot of news articles about "back to the office", but they recirculate the same bad ideas. Let's provide some new ideas for the media to circulate. It may also have the effect of making the office less terrible.

I would like my work computer to do Windows updates lightning quick in the office. It currently takes weeks, in or out of the office. Stopping in for a day makes no difference, so there is no point. Now, if there was a point, I would go in.

What would get you in the office?

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[-] wreel@lemmy.sdf.org 2 points 2 years ago

With regard to point 1 I've personally found that my work relationships have not been impacted by remote work. I still can have honest and hard conversations when needed but also able to just shoot the shit and connect with people all over the globe. I have friends in Spain, Brazil, Scotland and Italy now. However I think there's a real component of playing politics that's lost when there is no office to roam around in and jump people but in my eyes that's a good thing. And honestly that's what really bothers middle management. They've built up a career playing that game of in person politics but once they had to survive in a remote working world where ad-hoc discussions get thrown out of the window they find their usual toolbox is empty. And it drives them crazy.

I've been hearing number 3 for about 20 years. It never works out that way and if they could split the job between cheap overseas contractors and limited on site employees then most businesses would have already done so. International hiring is a good thing and great talent can be found but it's usually not the "savings" people expect it to be because the market will always adjust to demand.

[-] Sloogs@lemmy.dbzer0.com 1 points 2 years ago* (last edited 2 years ago)

I've been hearing number 3 for about 20 years.

My old company succeeded. Telus Communications. What they did differently, and I hope other businesses don't catch on to this any time soon, is that they needed to build a dedicated branch office in Manilla. Not just a contracting service, but a full on branch office that has all the remote infrastructure they need built right in. Then they realized during the pandemic after they sent all domestic staff home that there was effectively no difference from a remote deployment standpoint between domestic staff and Manilla staff. Now they're laying off most domestic staff, or use the capital they've freed up to offer buyouts. They've basically nearly killed off one of the strongest domestic unionized workforces in Canada with aggressive offshoring and contracting. It's sad to see.

this post was submitted on 12 Aug 2023
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